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Reason 137 not to mix religion and politics.
Burning a flag is a clear political expression.
Burning a Quran is hard to classify. It is a political expression in one sense, but predominately because of the inappropriate inclusion of religion in politics. And as many point out, despite intent, the primary impact of the action is upon people for their faith, not their political views.
We should be always careful of bringing religious symbology into politics and political symbols into religion. Blurring this line, confuses two issues that shouldn't be confused.
When my father and my brother were both buried, the traditions were careful about this symbology. Both being veterans, they were eligible for military symbology. During the visitation at the funeral home, there were folded flags on the corners of the caskets. Military awards and other momentos were present and displayed. At the church, for their funeral masses, the flags were removed and replaced with the white pall (a symbol associated with baptism). As we left the church with them, we stopped in the church and removed the pall. Outside, before placing them in the hearse, the flag was unfolded and replaced on the casket.
It is a subtle symbology, but important. They were not "soldiers of God". I know not all funerals work this way and many religions will leave the flag on the casket, that's fine. I'm not making a point about the appropriateness of funeral symbology. My point isn't so much about funerals as it is about the mixing of religious and political symbols and the larger issue of mixing religion and politics. When we mix them, we mix incompatible traditions and beliefs, and we set up the kinds of conflicts we now see.
I wouldn't burn a Quran, or a Bible or a Book of Mormon. Truth is, book burning in general just don't sit well. And I'd have a hard time burning a flag. It sat on my brothers coffin. In sat on my fathers coffin. But I recognize that the reason it sat on those coffins is what makes it a political symbol. People abuse religious symbols for political purposes. But I'm not sure that one persons abuse is a good justification for anothers excess.
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